Disclaimer: Not affiliated with or endorsed by Honda Motor Company. For informational purposes only. Full Disclaimer

Problems with 2006 Honda Civic ENGINE

On average, the 2006 Honda Civic starts to “feel” problems with the ENGINE and its various aspects after 115 393 miles.

Recently reported ENGINE problems on 2006 Honda Civic

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. when the vehicle was taken to the dealer for an oil change, the contact noticed that the engine was fractured. it was diagnosed that the entire engine needed to be replaced. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was made aware of the failure. the failure mileage was 91,000.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. when the heat was activated, the vehicle circulated cold air instead. the dealer diagnosed that the engine had a fractured block. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was made aware of the failure and stated that there was no recall. the manufacturer was willing to provide a portion of the repair through the warranty. the vin was unknown. the approximate failure mileage was 103,000.

Engine block cracked and is leaking coolant, requiring replacement of the whole engine. this is a known issue covered in honda technical service bulletin 10-048, but that only extended the warranty to 10 years. my car was originally sold in july 2006, so this happened about 7 months past that 10-year cutoff. i've been quoted $5800 for a new engine, which is more than the car's value. there are many other owners of 2006 models in the same situation already, and there will be even more as each subsequent model year up to 2009 hits the 10-year mark. luckily i caught this problem before it became a major hazard. first the car's heater quit blowing warm air, then a few days later i noticed coolant leaking from underneath any time i parked. i took it to a mechanic who found the crack in the engine block. if i hadn't noticed the leak and the coolant had been completely depleted, the engine could have overheated and possibly failed altogether while driving.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while stopped at a red light, the contact observed smoke and the vehicle began leaking radiator fluid. the failure occurred without warning. the vehicle was taken to a mechanic where it was diagnosed that the engine block fractured and the engine needed to be replaced. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified of the failure. the failure mileage was 140,000.

Cracked head

The car has a cracked engine block and is leaking coolant. per research honda is aware that this is an issue for 2006 - 2009 honda civics and extended the warranty for 10 years on the motor. the original owner purchased the car in may 2006 and my daughter bought it from a dealership in december 2013. we were not made aware of an extended warranty on the motor or that this could be an issue. honda was contacted and they are refusing to assist my daughter with replacement of a motor that will now cost her $5000 on a car she still owes on.

I started my vehicle during the night and cold weather drove my car less than five minutes when the inside started smelling like anti coolant. i pulled over to check fluid and noticed the block had a crack in it i have noticed there is a problem in this model of car but it's for ten years of purchase and i never got a letter stating i could get this check earlier i need help

I was recently informed by a honda repair shop that my 2006 honda civic had a cracked engine block. the serviceman recommended that i contact honda usa regarding a technical service bulletin that was issued. i contact honda and they acknowledged that this was a problem with this vehicle, however they cannot pay for the repair because the extended warranty expired. i explained that i brought the car used would not have known that there was such a serious issue with the car unless i needed a repair at a dealership. i have spoken to two representatives so far and received the same "standard" answer. "we acknowledge there is a problem of this type with the car and that's why we issued the extended warranty." i explained that this is obviously a wide spread issue with the vehicle and honda should stand behind it's product by paying 100% of the repair cost with no time or mileage limit. as an owner of two acuras and a honda, i am extremely disappointed with my experience with their approach to consumer complaints regarding this car. this defect is not the customers fault. i am continuing to pursue a resolution that ends with honda taking full responsibility for the defect in these cars. i pray that someone does not get seriously hurt before honda finally makes this right or nhtsa forces them to issue a full recall. i now have the vehicle sitting in my driveway and cannot drive it because of the many testimonials that describe that doing so will result in a catastrophic engine failure that will result in a total engine replacement. as an acura and honda owner, i am becoming more and more skeptical about honda as a company that i had always regarded as very good in the past.

Takata recall. i was at a stop light when i noticed that my car was running extremely hot. smoke was coming out from under the hood, and it had run out of coolant. we then found out that it was leaking coolant from a crack in the engine block which is a known issue with honda civics from 2006-2009. when we contacted honda they told me that the recall had been expired since may of 2016 and there is nothing they can do to help me. this crack in my block is due to honda's negligence in manufacturing process of their engine blocks, yet they refuse to take responsibility. the car has had no other issues and has been properly maintained.

The engine block started leaking coolant that caused overheating and damage to the engine. i discovered it while driving. *tr

Cracked engine block. my car over heated while i was driving to work in which i was driving 30mph, just two miles away from my house. can you imagine if i was on the freeway and/ or got into a car accident because of this? the engine heat gage went up to only of the way high and since this was not normal that i have ever seen for my car, i immediately pulled over and turned off my car. when i had pulled over my car was smoking. i called for road side assistance to help me take my car to a mechanic. i thought it was just a minor repair but to my surprise it was a factory defect with honda. the problem with my engine ended up being a cracked engine block in which honda had never informed of about this know factory defect/recall for certain year honda civics. i had to have the entire engine block replaced. while my car was being repaired by the mechanic i did found out, upon my own research on the internet, about honda civic cracked engine block defects/recalls. i had called my local honda dealership asking if what i had found out on the internet was true they said yes. a few months earlier, i had received a recall letter in the mail and a call from honda only on the passenger side airbag which i promptly had fix. if i had received information on the airbag, why was this not the case of a cracked engine block? honda told me that because i am 4 months passed the 10-year warranty, they can do nothing for me and that the recall has been expired. i was shocked. honda had also delayed my case for 3 months. i was instructed to contact the bbb to help me with this. dealing with honda has been exhausting and i have lost work and having friend take me to work. my car was at the mechanics for one week. vehicle identification number: [xxx] attached are pictures and receipts for work done as well as my cover letter i sent to honda. information redacted pursuant to the freedom of information act (foia), 5 u.s.c. 552(b)(6). *tr

At about 110,000 miles on my 2006 civic, the engine block developed a crack. honda is aware of this problem and extended warranties for this issue, but failed to contact us (my wife is the original owner). we are now just outside of the extended warranty and the cost to repair was quoted as about $5,000. honda should cover this cost due to their knowledge of a faulty product but it appears we are in the hook for the cost (likely will result in our need to buy a new vehicle).

The vehicle is has a defect in the engine where the lower engine block corrodes, leaks coolant, and then as a result overheats. this defect has been admitted to by honda and they have issued tsb 08-044. this happened to me and as a result i was stranded without a working vehicle on the side of the road. i contacted honda regarding this and was told my car is 2.5 months outside the warranty. i was offered an insignificant amount of assistance with the cost of the repair. i understand the warranty is expired, but i firmly believe that honda should take responsibility for their mistakes, which they have refused to do.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while driving 60 mph, the vehicle overheating indicator illuminated. the driver was able to pull the vehicle over and noticed smoke under the hood. the vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic where no issues were found. the dealer diagnosed that the vehicle had a cracked engine block. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified. the vin was invalid. the failure mileage was unknown.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while driving approximately 45 mph, a loud pop was heard and smoke appeared from the vehicle. there were no warning indicators illuminated. the contact had to maneuver the vehicle to the side of the road to a complete stop. the vehicle was towed to the nearest dealer where it was diagnosed that the engine block was cracked. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified of the failure. the contact also stated that the vehicle was purchased with an extended warranty. the approximate failure mileage was 130,000.

Car overheated very quickly while driving 60 mph in the fast lane resulting in a plume of blinding white smoke coming from the hood. this was a very scary and life threatening experience as i barely got the car to the shoulder with other cars wizing past me at speed. had the car looked at by a mechanic friend who traced the leak to a crack in the engine block. he said this was not repairable and would need a new engine block. the crack is located in the front of the engine, behind the exhaust header pipe and difficult to see. it is however in the same area as all of the other reported complaints from other civic owners on the web. after some research on the internet i found out that this was a very common and widespread issue with the 2006-2009 civics. i contacted honda corporate and was told that there was an extended warranty because of this issue. funny how i never received any notices whatsoever and did not have the slightest clue that this was an issue for the past 10 years of ownership. needless to say i am one year past the extended warranty and honda will cover nothing at all. car has 63,000 miles and is otherwise in mint condition. asked honda to prove that they sent out the notice to me and they have yet to respond. had i received any notification of this issue i would have most likely traded the car. now i am stuck with an inoperable car and an $8,900.00 repair (quoted by honda dealership). totally left in the dark, but happy to be alive. this is a widespread issue all over the internet just google honda civic cracked engine block and hundreds maybe thousands of complaints will pop up. how this very dangerous issue is not a recall is beyond me. i guess someone will have to die before it is. sad. *tr

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while the vehicle was at the dealer for an oil change, the technician attempted to drive the vehicle into the garage, but the engine failed to start without warning. the technician diagnosed that the engine coolant leaked onto the engine and caused it to shut down. the technician stated that the failure was not included in a recall. the contact found a tsb and made the manufacturer aware of the failure and a warranty extension that was noted on the tsb. the manufacturer stated that the extended warranty was expired. the vehicle was not repaired. the failure mileage was approximately 210,000. the vin was not provided.

Bought a 2006 honda civic with 54,000 miles in august of 2016. on a 6 hr trip to omaha nebraska the engine began to overheat. pulled into a gas station and discovered that the coolant was nearly empty. when the car was taken to a honda dealer i was informed that the engine block was cracked and leaking coolant. it would have been replaced by honda but the extended 10 year warranty had expired by 7 months. currently on the hook for $5200 because of honda's known defective part

Recall honda won't honor warranty 10-048 only because on my tittle it states that the millege is not actual. which was a mistake by the dmv. not actual mileage my engine is seized due to the car over heating.

I have 2006 honda civic that i bought back in 2012 with 93k miles on it and now in 2016 i had my engine block leak and so i took it to honda dealer so they can check it and told me i had a crack on my engine and they said that handa sent a letter witch i never got and that my warranty is expire and they can't do any thing about i've never had problems with my car i always keep clean and make sure i do my maintenance on it i have no accidents also way i know i had a problem is by the car over heating and the smoke coming out while i was in highway with my family yet honda doesn't want to anything what about if we got hurt while waiting for some to come and tow my car away and for some to pick us to take us home now i have now car and nothing to drive i hope everyone speaks up for everyone.

While doing general maintenance on my 2006 honda civic (stationary) i noticed it was leaking coolant. after working on the car to find the leak and doing research online i found out that there is a known manufacture defect for 2006-2009 honda civics that causes a failure and crack in the engine block. there is a 10 year warranty extension, which i am beyond by 5 months so honda has refused to fix the vehicle under warranty. as an owner of two honda vehicles i am severely disappointed, especially since i was never notified of this by mail or otherwise by honda. i have received information from them regarding other issues on my 2011 accord, but never about the 2006 civic. if i had i may have been able to identify this problem within the warranty period as a small leak before it began dumping/pouring coolant. luckily, this never led to severe engine damage due to overheating while driving, which could have caused serious risk of accident and injury. in addition, honda was exceptionally rude and unhelpful on the phone. after days of going back and forth with them they finally gave me a claim number for the issue. once denying it they told me that i could call their claims department, which i already believed i was speaking to. to my surprise the number they game me was for the court system that had ruled on this case for honda. so, after wasting my time with them they felt it was appropriate to play what amounted to a practical joke on me. the worst joke of all is that they have failed me as a customer in all possible ways. i fully believe that this issue should be made a complete recall, as it is a known manufacturer defect and no fault of any customer who owns one of these vehicles. *tr

Cracked engine block. leakiging coolent.

Engine block cracked at 10-years, 4-months. honda warranted the engines originally for 5-years then extended block warranty to 8-years and finally to 10-years. the blocks have a major defect where the block cracks because the block wall is too thin on these aluminum blocks and mine was no different. my block failure came 4-months out of second extended warranty period. honda says they will not honor warranty because the car is 4-months out of warranty. called the local honda dealer and honda customer relations numbers to no avail. this problem is a defect and honda has admitted to it that's why they provided warranties for this problem. since my car is 10-years old and is 4-months out of the extended warranty for this covered repair, i am stuck paying to get my car on the road again at the tune of $5000 - $6000 at least. very disappointed in honda for their stance on this issue with me. it's basically my bad that the engine block cracked at 10-years, 4-months instead of within the 10-years stated on the warranty. i didn't even receive a letter explaining the warranties or extended warranties. i think honda should step up and cover this repair especially since the problem is their fault in their manufacturing of the blocks in the first place.

I was driving on i-40 traveling towards wilminton, nc when i looked down and saw the temperature light was registering hot and was in the red zone. i immediately pulled over and turned the car off. i had the car towed to wilminton, nc. the shop diagnosed the problem as a cracked engine block. they called honda to see if the car was covered under tsb 10-048 and they were told the 10 year warranty on my car expired in july. the car has only 66,000 miles on it. this is a huge safety issue. this defect can cause the car to stop running anywhere. if this had happened in raleigh on i-40 there could have been a serious accident.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while driving approximately 50 mph, the engine stalled without warning. the vehicle failed to restart. the vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic where it was diagnosed that the coolant system was leaking and the engine needed to be replaced. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was not notified of the failure. the approximate failure mileage was 13,234.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. the contact stated that the engine overheated while driving. the vehicle was taken to the local dealer where it was diagnosed that the engine block fractured due to defective material, which caused water to penetrate the engine cylinders. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified. the failure mileage was 270,000. updated 12/13/16*lj *tr

I was driving home after midnight and noticed a smell. i looked for smoke and saw none. i got stopped at a red light and checked the temperature gauge and saw it was at 3/4 rather than 1/2 and jumped to full while waiting at the red light. no warning lights or indicators ever lit up. i pulled into a gas station on the opposite side of the intersection and had it towed home and then again to the honda dealer i go to for my maintenance and repairs in the morning. they called later that afternoon to say it was a cracked engine block and would be $5000 + tax for a new block. they tried to get honda to honor the tsb-08-044 warranty but it was just outside the time frame for the warranty so honda refused. the car has around 148k miles on it and has always been in for all regular maintenance since i bought the car used in 2010 at 30k miles. i never received any notice of the problem with the engine block even though the original warranty extension to 8 years happened in august 2010. i did however get the airbag recall notice earlier this year, so honda knows i own the car and should have let me know about this issue and the warranty. checking on the internet, this engine block failure is still happening to way too many honda civics after 10 years with many ranges of mileage, but honda is refusing to help in any way for a known casting issue with the engine block. my two previous honda civics i owned for 11 years with 208 k miles and 9 years with 205k miles and neither of them had any issues with the engine block. the honda dealer that sold me the car in 2010 should have told me about the problem and didn't and honda itself should have informed me of the warranty extensions in 2010 and 2013 but didn't. engine blocks do not normally fail so i believe honda should be accountable for the costs no matter how long it takes for the problem to occur.

Takata recall - i use this vehicle as a family car, it is now considered unsafe to have passengers in my front seat. as of now the parts are not available to make my car safe. this is unacceptable as the only option i have is to purchase another vehicle, or rent a vehicle, in order to safely transport my family. also, my vehicle has an engine recall that was not properly communicated to me (the second owner), which has now led to the potential for catastrophic engine failure.

On the date of august 12, 2016 (friday) at or around 5:40 pm est. the vehicle broke down in motion and was unable to drive due to something involving the engine. the vehicle was on a city street. it had to be pushed off the roadway. noticed coolant leaking on the ground from the engine. the vehicle was towed by aaa to our local repair facility. on monday morning august 15, 2016 the vehicle was diagnosed as having a cracked engine block. at this point i had information on honda's engine block problems. 2006 honda civic 'engine block crack' technical service bulletin 10-048: the problem: the engine block may leak coolant, resulting in engine overheating. corrective action: dealers will replace the engine block free of charge. warranty info: repairs will be done under an extended warranty (10 years from the original date of purchase, no mileage limits). my 2006 honda civic was purchased august 14, 2006. the engine failure happened during the warrant period. my local honda dealership and american honda refuses to repair my vehicle at 100% they offered split cost for the engine block of 10% for me to pay. they also said the the gasket cylinder head was damaged due to over heating because of the cracked engine block. they had me pay 50% cost of the repair. they also had me pay 10% for replacement of coils. all this damage was due to the faulty engine block. tsb states replace the coils and check for head gasket damage. if damage is found go to step ?? i conclude it means replace the gasket cylinder head. honda clearly knows of this issue and has not issued any recalls. vehicles dying on the highways and byways in traffic and motion should be a safety concern. my vehicle was in warranty i should not be paying anything. i did not even ask for towing or alternate transportation nor was any offered. tsb 10_048

Car began overheating while driving. upon further inspection a hairline crack was visibly leaking coolant on the engine block. dealership has informed me that it is the crack from tsb 10-048 but will not cover said issue because the car is out of the warranty time limit . as a side note, being the third owner of the vehicle i was never notified of the extended warranty/ issue.

Noticed car temp rising and getting hotter, no indicators or warnings lights. let car cool off and noticed the coolant was extremely low, car had all fluids topped off during a recent check up. added coolant. all seemed fine till the next weekend when car started heat up again, brought car into shop. found engine block cracked and was leaking coolant. upon future investigation crack is same location as reference tsb no. 10-048. since this happened 20 days after the 10 year date honda is refusing to replace. we purchased the car a year ago from a dealer and was not aware of this issue.

I was driving on the freeway and heard a clicking noise. by the time i pulled off the freeway the oil light was on. my car then died and soon found the car had overheated. i took it to honda and they said it is probably a cracked engine block but were unable to investigate further because it had been more than 8 years since the extended warranty was offered for this problem.

Have a 2006 honda civic. as i was driving on a highway i had white smoke come out of my engine bay. i pulled over and called the towing. had it towed to my local honda dealer just to find out that its got cracked engine block. and the said i am out side of time period for the extended warranty by just over a month. this is unacceptable... if they know that the engine block is faulty then how can they put a time limit on the warranty. i just bought this car not too long ago and now i have to spend thousands to get it to run again. this needs to be a recall period....

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while driving approximately 48 mph, the vehicle started smoking from the hood and overheated. there were no warning indicators illuminated. the vehicle was towed to the dealer where it was diagnosed that the engine needed to be replaced. the vehicle was repaired. the manufacturer was notified of the failure. the approximate failure mileage was 100,000.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while the vehicle was parked, the contact smelled antifreeze. there were no warning lights illuminated. the vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic where it was diagnosed that the engine block fractured and needed to be replaced. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified of the failure. the failure mileage was approximately 135,000.

While traveling down the road at 65mph, my 2006 honda civic experienced an unexpected overheating incident. while surrounded by heavy rush hour traffic, i just barely made it to the side of the expressway safely. it turns out that the 2006 honda civic has a known manufacturer flaw that results in cracked engine blocks and consequent loss of coolant. since the crack was on the inside, i had no way to tell that i was driving with such risk. there were no liquid drips under my vehicle. honda will years ownership. my vehicle was 10 years and 2 months. the original warranty they offered was for 10 years, unrestricted mileage. my vehicle is a lower then average mileage vehicle so my 10 years was slightly exceeded. this is a real safety issue and a formal recall should be offered or time and/or mileage be granted to ensure that owners can have their vehicles inspected and repaired. had i not been lucky enough to get out of traffic, i could have caused a huge accident that could result in the loss of my life or other vehicle operators who were trying to avoid me. please investigate this and any help you can offer would be extremely helpful. *tr

Hello! a very well-known issue with the 06-09 honda civic is a tendency for the engine blocks to crack. frequenting online forums and websites, it seems a wide range of people are affected from less than 1,000 miles to up to 200,000 miles. that being said, it seems this car is a literal time bomb. there have been incidents of people driving on the highway only to rapidly lose power to all systems, including the brakes and power steering. needless to say, this is a profound safety hazard, not only to the driver, but other drivers as well! that being said, honda admitted that the tendency for blocks to crack was due a faulty casting process. they had issues an initial 8 year warranty and increased that to 10 years. as of late, many current owners have still had their blocks cracked. only this time, honda is refusing to fix their faulty product. as such, i wanted to bring attention to this issue and hope something can be done to alleviate this matter. a car's block under normal maintenance and use should never catastrophically fail, let alone risk people's lives! even if a recall isn't enforced, at least hold honda accountable to their faulty engines and place an extended warranty for this specific issue. thank you. *takata recall *tr

I have a 2006 honda civic lx with only 53,000 miles on it lately it has benn one repair after othet i had the tranmission done it would not go into reverse gear net it started to leak oil for the engine the seal was replaced next it leaked from another part of the engine i have a bill repairs in writing also the motor mount was cracked, and another seal had to be replaced i have invoice of payment for all this work starting from nov of 2015 to present just picked my car up today for the leaks and a starter had to be put on car was dragging and not starting 5/7/2016 i also took my car to the dealer ship for over heating and was told they couldn't fine anything i was not pleased my car is under warranty for this problem but they did nothing about it but charged me 114.00 to look at it this was unfair and shouldn't benn done as a good will check but i was treated like i had to bring my car there. the customer service rep. was upset because my car had not been seen there for a while i can take my car were i want to take it but he was ruled by what he said to me. i take good care of my car, but there are too many problems with this civic my 1989 civic didn't have problems like this i feel i should get help with some of the money i have already paid out for the repairs my car is falling apart month by month and i need answers honda need to stand by their product.

My husband was driving the honda civic on friday morning 4/16/16 with some other people in the car when fumes started coming out of the front of the vehicle. he pulled over because it was overheating. took the car to midas which was closed by and was told that it was a crack in the engine. he was asked by midas $2600 to get the engine replaced. i called the dealership where the car was purchased and was told they couldn't do anything because the warranty had expired. i told them that if they knew about the issue why didn't they issue a recall. i was told to take it up with the honda corporate office. people could have gotten hurt from this incident.

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. while driving 55 mph, smoke appeared under the hood of the vehicle and the vehicle lost power. the vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic where it was diagnosed that the engine block was cracked and needed to be replaced. the vehicle was not repaired. the manufacturer was notified of the failure. the failure mileage was 120,000.

While driving my 2006 honda civic the engine block cracked and engine overheated, making my car a potential fire hazard, unsafe and undrivable. i took my honda into the dealership & they diagnosed it as a cracked engine block and offered to relplace with used engine for $4333.00. after researching this issue online i found plenty of other honda owners with the same problem. the cause of the engine crack was a manufacturing defect from honda.

Hello! a very well-known issue with the 06-09 honda civic is a tendency for the engine blocks to crack. frequenting online forums and websites, it seems a wide range of people are affected from less than 1,000 miles to up to 200,000 miles. that being said, it seems this car is a literal time bomb. there have been incidents of people driving on the highway only to rapidly lose power to all systems, including the brakes and power steering. needless to say, this is a profound safety hazard, not only to the driver, but other drivers as well! that being said, honda admitted that the tendency for blocks to crack was due a faulty casting process. they had issues an initial 8 year warranty and increased that to 10 years. as of late, many current owners have still had their blocks cracked. only this time, honda is refusing to fix their faulty product. as such, i wanted to bring attention to this issue and hope something can be done to alleviate this matter. a car's block under normal maintenance and use should never catastrophically fail, let alone risk people's lives! even if a recall isn't enforced, at least hold honda accountable to their faulty engines and place an extended warranty for this specific issue. thank you. *tr

I have a 2006 honda civic vin# [xxx] that has a engine block hair line crack. i called american honda and they told me based on the vin that i provided this vehicle doesn't qualify under the recall. so was this just a coincidence that my vehicle had a crack on the engine block. they vehicle is a daily driven car on the highway and the problem started when my wife noticed a coolant smell. information redacted pursuant to the freedom of information act (foia), 5 u.s.c. 552(b)(6). *tr

Engine block and head crack.

Engine block crack

Tl* the contact owns a 2006 honda civic. the contact stated that while driving at 35 mph, the vehicle started overheating. in addition, the vehicle stalled. the vehicle failed to restart. after waiting some time, the vehicle was able to restart. the vehicle was taken to a dealer where it was diagnosed that the engine had a crack and needed to be replaced. the vehicle was repaired. the manufacturer was made aware of the failure. the failure mileage was 150,000.

Barely 20 days after the warranty my car stopped on a highway with white fumes under the hood. with brakes, transmission, accelerator not working, i had literally rely on my luck to get it out of the last lane onto a shoulder. it was scary. i towed the car to a nearest dealer. he diagnosed cracked engine block due to over heating, coolant leakage. i had replace the engine for 3494.90$.

Vehicle turned off suddenly without warning, while in motion. mechanic confirmed that there was a crack in the engine block that caused the vehicle to stop. parts are on back order and vehicle is inoperable, but honda would not provide a loaner vehicle.

Vehicle began to overheat at low speed. cel came on and started blinking and vehicle went into "limp mode". vehicle could not go over 10mph. car returned home and code indicated misfire in 3rd cylinder. coolant was extremely low and a small amount of smoke/steam could be seen coming from tailpipe. pressure test of coolant system revealed leaks in all cylinders (primarily c3). compression test indicated crack in head (near intake). possibility due to overheating and warping of head. called honda america to verify that issues is covered under warranty (specifically tsb 10-048). honda america denied warranty because the tsb only covers specific external cracks in the engine block. the cracks on this vehicle were likely inside the head, possibly inside of cylinder. cause of initial overheating remains unidentified. honda america maintains that this warranty is specific to external cracks.

As the single owner and driver of an 06 honda civic that i purchased new and paid for in full, i have full service for the vehicle as recommended at the dealer site where it is purchased. i had the vehicle serviced for lube/oil/& oil filter change on 7/27/2015 and they also perform the multipoint inspection. in just 12 days, engine overheating occurred while i was driving on i-95. upon my return home from work, i heard a humming i had never heard before. as i slowed down to listen closer to determine origin, i see that no engine lights. after few minutes, the temperature gauge indicated sever overheating, then the car sputters, rapidly losing power -i barely made it to the side of the road safely out of traffic on i-95 when the car shuts off and smoke. i had absolutely no warning or even a hint of a problem; no noises, no dash lights on, no issues with ignition, gears, or driving performance. i had to arrange the car tow to my dealers service department. after that, the dealer reports engine is completely burned, not drivable and not repairable. the oil strip burns half way. they dont know what causes the engine overheated. this overheating problem is not due to the cracks that are included in the warranty extension. they don't cover the replacement cost. if we want to replace a engine, a used engine block is $5600. it looks like i will need to rent a car for at least next two weeks because i am still negotiating with my dealer about this issue and if it is covered by any warranty. they are unable to answer me what cause the issue when the car just finished its service and everything including engine condition is great. i could go on and on and on with the costs involved, time involved and the incredible inconvenience of this event.. not to mention the safety issue while driving on the high way!!!

Other 2006 Honda Civic Problem Categories